They talked about the future like it was already decided.
The apartment you would share. The countries you would visit. The family you would build together. Every plan spoken with conviction, with warmth, with the kind of detail that made it feel real.
Months later, none of it happened. And when you look back, you realise none of it was ever going to.
This is future faking — and it is one of the most psychologically damaging patterns in modern relationships.
What is future faking?
Future faking is the act of painting a vivid, emotionally compelling picture of a shared future — not because you intend to build it, but because the promise keeps the other person present and emotionally invested right now.
It is not always conscious. Some people genuinely believe, in the moment, every future they describe. But belief in the moment without sustained intention is not a commitment — it is a feeling, and feelings are not the same as character.
The damage of future faking is layered. It prevents clear-eyed decision-making — if you believe someone is building a future with you, you stay, you invest, you restructure your life. It erodes self-trust. And it creates anticipatory grief — mourning a future you genuinely believed in, for a relationship that may never have been real in the way you experienced it.
The Islamic lens: sidq and amanah in relationships
Two concepts sit at the heart of this topic in Islamic ethics.
Sidq — truthfulness. Not merely the absence of lying, but the positive commitment to clarity. Being honest about what you can offer, what you intend, and where you actually stand — even when that honesty is uncomfortable.
Amanah — trustworthiness. The Prophet ﷺ described the signs of a hypocrite as: "When he speaks, he lies. When he makes a promise, he breaks it." (Bukhari & Muslim).
"This is the Day when the truthful will benefit from their truthfulness."
— Surah Al-Ma'idah (5:119)
Future faking is the opposite of both. It creates a false picture of intention, trades on someone's genuine trust, and leaves behind real emotional harm. The Islamic framework is clear: if you speak of a future with someone, that speech carries weight. It is not casual conversation. It creates expectation — and expectation creates obligation.
The pattern you may recognise
Future faking tends to intensify at specific moments. When you are pulling back or expressing doubt, the promises become more detailed — more anchored in time and specificity. When conflict arises, the future is invoked to restore emotional stability rather than resolve what is present. Over time, you realise the future is always referenced but never approached. The goalposts keep moving. There is always a reason the plan is not yet possible. And yet the language of intention remains.
A person who genuinely intends a future with you will take steps toward it. Small steps, imperfect steps — but direction. A person who does not intend it will give you words in the direction of it. The difference is observable, if you are willing to look.
What you can do
Anchor conversations to the present, not the future. Ask not just what someone wants someday — ask what they are doing now that reflects those intentions. Present behaviour predicts future action far more reliably than future promises.
Notice how promises respond to pressure. Do the plans get clearer and more specific over time? Or do they escalate in language when you express doubt, then recede when you settle?
Sit with discomfort instead of plans. Future faking works because the future feels better than confronting an uncertain present. If you find yourself soothed more by what someone promises than by how they currently show up — that gap is worth examining honestly.
For more on the manipulation pattern that often accompanies future faking, see: "You Deserve Better" — A Soft Manipulation Tactic.
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Frequently asked questions
What is future faking in relationships?
Future faking is when someone paints a vivid, emotionally compelling picture of a shared future — not because they intend to build it, but because the promise keeps the other person emotionally invested in the present. It prevents clear decision-making, erodes self-trust, and creates anticipatory grief — mourning a future you genuinely believed in. It is not always conscious: some people genuinely believe their own promises in the moment. But belief in the moment without sustained intention is not a commitment.
What does Islam say about making promises you don't keep?
The Prophet ﷺ described three signs of a hypocrite: when he speaks he lies, when he makes a promise he breaks it, and when he is entrusted he betrays the trust. (Bukhari & Muslim). In Islamic ethics, speaking of a future with someone creates genuine obligation — it is not casual conversation. The concept of amanah (trustworthiness) requires that our words carry the weight of our actual intentions, not just our momentary feelings.
How do I know if someone is future faking?
Track whether the promised future is approaching or just being re-described. Future faking tends to intensify when you express doubt — the plans become more detailed, more urgent — then recede when you settle. The goalposts keep moving. There is always a reason the plan is not yet possible. But the language of intention remains constant. The test: observe present behaviour, not future promises. Someone genuinely moving toward a future with you will take steps toward it — small, imperfect steps, but direction.
How do you heal from future faking?
Healing from future faking requires rebuilding trust in your own perception. The self-doubt that follows — 'I heard them say it, I felt it was real, how was I so wrong?' — is often more damaging than the relationship itself. Islamic CBT addresses this through muhasabah (honest self-examination) of the patterns that made you vulnerable, the grief of mourning a future that was not real, and the cognitive work of separating your perceptive ability from the other person's dishonesty.